Berkshire is right - in a 50 yr old building the source of humidity is either coming from the occupied space above, from condensation on poorly insulated cold water pipes, or leaky pipes (or all of the above). If you're only treating the symptom, you basically have to figure out the volume of the crawl space and figure out air changes per hr of air movement through the crawl space. There is no code guidance on this, this is engineering judgement.
One way to do this would be to install a inline exhaust fans at the existing vents on one side of the building (closest to power source and entry to space for service), and draw make-up air from the opposite side. This worked for me in WI, they had mold in the crawl space and they also had vents.
This is Dallas so there are no issues with freezing pipes in the crawl space right?